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Auction archive: Lot number 1

Emily Mae Smith

Estimate
£40,000 - £60,000
ca. US$51,854 - US$77,781
Price realised:
£277,200
ca. US$359,348
Auction archive: Lot number 1

Emily Mae Smith

Estimate
£40,000 - £60,000
ca. US$51,854 - US$77,781
Price realised:
£277,200
ca. US$359,348
Beschreibung:

Property from a Private Collection, U.S.A.1Emily Mae SmithAlien Shoressigned and dated 'Emily MS 2018' on the reverse oil on linen 137.2 x 116.8 cm (54 x 46 in.) Painted in 2018. Full CataloguingEstimate £40,000 - 60,000 ‡ Place Advance BidContact Specialist Kate Bryan Specialist, Head of Evening Sale +44 20 7318 4026 kbryan@phillips.com
OverviewPainted in 2018, Emily Mae Smith’s Alien Shores portrays an anthropomorphic broomstick figure – the artist’s signature avatar – looking outward towards a surrealist horizon. Gushing with deep, saccharine colours, the composition demonstrates Smith’s commanding ability to conjure an intelligible image with only formal suggestions: uncertain forms, subtly morphing hues, and a space devoid of place and time. Although she has been creating work continuously for the past two decades, Smith cannot be tied to a specific category or genre of painting. Her figurative work instead positions itself amidst a myriad different styles, spanning Pop, surrealism (as envisaged by the movement’s forefathers, but also as later interpreted by the Chicago Imagists), portraiture, and satire. With each work, the artist forcibly steps into a tradition of painting that has relegated women to the sidelines for centuries, using humour as a framework from which to build her imaginative visual universe. Currently the subject of significant commercial and critical attention, Smith was the subject of a solo exhibition at the Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, last year, and is once again at the heart of an institutional show at the SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah, running until 1 January 2021. 'Literally, a broom is a tool, but it's also this visual tool that communicates stories and ideas in my paintings. This agent, like some kind of secret agent, going through the history of art, disturbing constructs, making some trouble, or behaving badly, but is never doing the work of the broom. The broom is never sweeping!' —Emily Mae Smith In the melancholic scene that is set out for Alien Shores, Smith selects a household object to fill a role that, in a legacy of similarly themed paintings, would have traditionally been cast female. Complicating the viewer’s traditional understanding of notions of subjecthood and musedom, Smith thus inscribes herself within a lineage of artists who similarly employed iconographic symbols to convey wider-reaching truths – namely corporeality to signify gender-related complexities. Specifically, Smith’s Alien Shores recalls Christina Ramberg’s enigmatic renderings of hair, torsos and fragmented limbs encased in lace or tightened by corsetry, which investigate notions of fetishisation and the male gaze. Yet, realising the extent to which women alter their bodies to meet male expectations of how beauty should be embodied, Smith departs from the depiction of human bodies entirely, turning to humour to reveal her subject matter’s deeper ramifications. ‘That’s like how comedians work. They tell you really painful truths about the world as a joke’, the artist said. ‘Letting the humor come out was this big turning point, and then finding appropriate vehicles to create series helped me, too, because I could just keep digging. That’s when the broom appears’.i Detail of the present work The Broomstick as a Metaphor Further elucidating the origins of ther broomstick figure, Smith explained: ‘It initially came while I was re-watching Disney’s Fantasia, specifically that sequence when the broom is bewitched by the sorcerer's apprentice. It was just performing the labor, completely unappreciated for doing all the hard work in making the sorcerer’s castle function. I so deeply identified, not only as a female but just as a working class person. As a person who grew up working. […] So I was like, “Oh, that broom. I’m the broom. We're all the broom. Well, some people aren't.” When the broom got free, it started to do interesting things. Sometimes it looks more like a mop, sometimes it looks more like a paintbrush; and attributes of the broom become visible in other objects’.ii Merging notions of femininity, domesticity, and pictorial magic, Alien Shores embodies Smith’s idea that creativity in the hands of a female figure becomes inherently adversary, standing against centuries of painterly tradition. By endowing the female body with the deeply

Auction archive: Lot number 1
Auction:
Datum:
20 Oct 2020
Auction house:
Phillips
null
Beschreibung:

Property from a Private Collection, U.S.A.1Emily Mae SmithAlien Shoressigned and dated 'Emily MS 2018' on the reverse oil on linen 137.2 x 116.8 cm (54 x 46 in.) Painted in 2018. Full CataloguingEstimate £40,000 - 60,000 ‡ Place Advance BidContact Specialist Kate Bryan Specialist, Head of Evening Sale +44 20 7318 4026 kbryan@phillips.com
OverviewPainted in 2018, Emily Mae Smith’s Alien Shores portrays an anthropomorphic broomstick figure – the artist’s signature avatar – looking outward towards a surrealist horizon. Gushing with deep, saccharine colours, the composition demonstrates Smith’s commanding ability to conjure an intelligible image with only formal suggestions: uncertain forms, subtly morphing hues, and a space devoid of place and time. Although she has been creating work continuously for the past two decades, Smith cannot be tied to a specific category or genre of painting. Her figurative work instead positions itself amidst a myriad different styles, spanning Pop, surrealism (as envisaged by the movement’s forefathers, but also as later interpreted by the Chicago Imagists), portraiture, and satire. With each work, the artist forcibly steps into a tradition of painting that has relegated women to the sidelines for centuries, using humour as a framework from which to build her imaginative visual universe. Currently the subject of significant commercial and critical attention, Smith was the subject of a solo exhibition at the Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, last year, and is once again at the heart of an institutional show at the SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah, running until 1 January 2021. 'Literally, a broom is a tool, but it's also this visual tool that communicates stories and ideas in my paintings. This agent, like some kind of secret agent, going through the history of art, disturbing constructs, making some trouble, or behaving badly, but is never doing the work of the broom. The broom is never sweeping!' —Emily Mae Smith In the melancholic scene that is set out for Alien Shores, Smith selects a household object to fill a role that, in a legacy of similarly themed paintings, would have traditionally been cast female. Complicating the viewer’s traditional understanding of notions of subjecthood and musedom, Smith thus inscribes herself within a lineage of artists who similarly employed iconographic symbols to convey wider-reaching truths – namely corporeality to signify gender-related complexities. Specifically, Smith’s Alien Shores recalls Christina Ramberg’s enigmatic renderings of hair, torsos and fragmented limbs encased in lace or tightened by corsetry, which investigate notions of fetishisation and the male gaze. Yet, realising the extent to which women alter their bodies to meet male expectations of how beauty should be embodied, Smith departs from the depiction of human bodies entirely, turning to humour to reveal her subject matter’s deeper ramifications. ‘That’s like how comedians work. They tell you really painful truths about the world as a joke’, the artist said. ‘Letting the humor come out was this big turning point, and then finding appropriate vehicles to create series helped me, too, because I could just keep digging. That’s when the broom appears’.i Detail of the present work The Broomstick as a Metaphor Further elucidating the origins of ther broomstick figure, Smith explained: ‘It initially came while I was re-watching Disney’s Fantasia, specifically that sequence when the broom is bewitched by the sorcerer's apprentice. It was just performing the labor, completely unappreciated for doing all the hard work in making the sorcerer’s castle function. I so deeply identified, not only as a female but just as a working class person. As a person who grew up working. […] So I was like, “Oh, that broom. I’m the broom. We're all the broom. Well, some people aren't.” When the broom got free, it started to do interesting things. Sometimes it looks more like a mop, sometimes it looks more like a paintbrush; and attributes of the broom become visible in other objects’.ii Merging notions of femininity, domesticity, and pictorial magic, Alien Shores embodies Smith’s idea that creativity in the hands of a female figure becomes inherently adversary, standing against centuries of painterly tradition. By endowing the female body with the deeply

Auction archive: Lot number 1
Auction:
Datum:
20 Oct 2020
Auction house:
Phillips
null
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